
Loneliness doesn’t just ache emotionally. For older adults across Europe, feeling persistently lonely is tied to measurably worse memory, though not because it speeds up decline over time. A large new study tracking more than 10,000 Europeans over six years found that adults reporting high loneliness had lower memory scores from the start, but loneliness was not associated with faster memory loss as people aged, suggesting the gap is present from the outset rather than opening up gradually.
Many researchers have long believed loneliness acts like a slow poison on the brain, gradually wearing down thinking skills and eventually increasing dementia risk. But this study, published in the journal Aging & Mental Health, adds an important wrinkle to that view. Prior evidence is genuinely mixed, with some studies finding loneliness accelerates cognitive decline and others finding no effect at all. What this research contributes is a closer look at memory specifically, across a large, geographically diverse sample, over a defined six-year window.
That scope matters. If loneliness is a marker of already-lower memory performance rather than a force that accelerates decline, it changes how doctors and policymakers should think about stepping in, and when.
How Loneliness and Memory Were Measured
Researchers drew on data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, known as SHARE, one of the largest ongoing studies of aging across the continent. They analyzed information from three waves of data collection spanning 2012 to 2019, covering participants from 12 countries including Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Denmark, Sweden, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Belgium, and Austria.
Altogether, 10,217 adults aged 65 to 94 made up the final sample. All had completed a loneliness assessment at the study’s starting point and taken part in all three waves. People already diagnosed with Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia, or who had trouble performing daily tasks, were excluded. Loneliness was measured using a three-question scale asking how often someone feels they lack companionship, feel left out, or feel isolated. Participants were sorted into low, average, and high loneliness groups; the low and average groups were combined and compared against the high loneliness group. About 7.7% fell into the high loneliness category.
Memory was tested at each wave using a word recall task. Participants heard a list of 10 words read aloud and tried to repeat back as many as possible within one minute for immediate recall, then did the same five minutes later for delayed recall.
Loneliness Linked to Lower Memory From the Start
At the study’s outset, the average immediate recall score was 5.4 out of 10 and delayed recall averaged 4.8. Adults with high loneliness started noticeably lower: immediate recall of 4.9 and delayed recall of 3.5, compared with 5.4 and 4.1 for everyone else. The differences were statistically significant.
When researchers tracked how memory changed over time, everyone’s scores declined slightly each year at roughly the same rate, regardless of loneliness level. High loneliness was associated with lower starting scores for both immediate and delayed recall, but had no measurable effect on how fast memory faded over six years.
Age was by far the strongest factor driving both lower baseline memory and faster decline. Adults aged 75 to 84 and those 85 and older showed significantly steeper drops compared to those aged 65 to 74. Diabetes also played a role in delayed recall, where it was linked to a faster rate of decline. Depression, high blood pressure, and poor self-rated health were all tied to lower memory scores at baseline but, like loneliness, didn’t change the speed of decline.
Being female, reporting good health, staying physically active, and participating in social activities such as volunteering, attending clubs, or taking classes were all linked to higher baseline memory scores.
Geographic patterns also emerged. Southern European countries reported the highest rates of high loneliness, while northern and central regions reported the lowest. Southern and eastern countries also showed weaker baseline memory scores, though researchers cautioned against reading those gaps as proof that geography causes memory problems. Historical factors, including nutritional hardship during and after World War II when many of these older adults were children, and socioeconomic stress could help explain the difference.
Source : https://studyfinds.com/feeling-lonely-already-affecting-memory/

